I had the pleasure of spending yesterday ensconced at Stanford Law School at the Internet Law seminar sponsored by Harvard Law’s Berkman Center and Stanford’s Center for Internet Law. The day was devoted to enlightening, challenging discussions of the issues around digital content, and particularly, digital music, and I’ll say something about that in a second.
But first, the chairs. The entire lecture hall at Stanford was equipped with Aeron chairs! Aeron — meshy, black, cool. Comfortable. Expensive.
Back in the dotcom boom days, more than one careless reporter referred, Jayson-Blair-like, to Salon’s luxurious Aeron-bedecked offices. The trouble was, Salon has never ever had a single Aeron chair. So I’m a little sensitive on the subject. And floored to find them in a university lecture hall. But then I guess Stanford isn’t any old university. And there are a lot of liquidated Aeron chairs kicking around the Valley these days.
[I was going to post some substantive comments next, but unfortunately, I left my notes from the day on my laptop, and I left my laptop home today… So I’ll have to post my thoughts over the weekend.]
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